I am curious as to where a 29:05 10,000m runner with 3:45 1500m speed should finish in the NCAA Division 1, 2, and 3 Cross Country National Championships.
I am curious as to where a 29:05 10,000m runner with 3:45 1500m speed should finish in the NCAA Division 1, 2, and 3 Cross Country National Championships.
Somewhere between 1 and 200. Don't think many 3:45 guys would fall past 200 tho.
CuriousAboutThis wrote:
I am curious as to where a 29:05 10,000m runner with 3:45 1500m speed should finish in the NCAA Division 1, 2, and 3 Cross Country National Championships.
Maybe near the back or the fringe of all american in D1 (maybe), and probably top 5 in DIII
29:05 puts you in the top 28 qualifying times for D1 Outdoor in 2017.
Probably top 40 in XC (All American)
29:05 puts you in the top 3 qualifying times for D2 Outdoor in 2017.
Probably on the podium in XC.
29:05 would've been the fastest qualifying time for D3 Outdoor 2017 by 13 seconds.
Probably the national champ in XC.
Assuming you run to your full potential, I agree with the 40th place estimate. 29:05 10k on the track probably gives you a a 23:50 8k XC. I think you will find most people with those PR's placing 35th on the higher end.
You finish at the finish line. Duh!
I finished 5th with 29:02 and 3:51 PR's. I bettered those times in the following indoor and outdoor seasons.
p.s. I'm old. Not sure if that holds up in the current system.
In the 2017 D1 championships, 40th place was 30:01. I guess a 29:05 guy on the track would run a little under 30 on that course, so that guy would probably place in the 30s.
Those times are Rupp's high school PRs.
What the f*ck does your 1500 PR matter if you're racing a 10,000 at NCAA's? This whole question is pointless, just look at the NCAA results you stupid idiot!!!
On how many people finish in front of you.
CuriousAboutThis wrote:
I am curious as to where a 29:05 10,000m runner with 3:45 1500m speed should finish in the NCAA Division 1, 2, and 3 Cross Country National Championships.
Men or Women?
You're the reason we cant have nice things wrote:
This guy's response is the reason why the unemployment rate is so high in this country. Who wants to work with or be around this guy:
What the f*ck does your 1500 PR matter if you're racing a 10,000 at NCAA's? This whole question is pointless, just look at the NCAA results you stupid idiot!!!
You are one hostile dude. I would imagine this whole post is nothing but a pipe dream for yourself which is why you are so disgruntled about it.
Duhlicious! wrote:
You finish at the finish line. Duh!
correct answer
71st
Wow!!!!!!!!! wrote:
You're the reason we cant have nice things wrote:
This guy's response is the reason why the unemployment rate is so high in this country. Who wants to work with or be around this guy:
What the f*ck does your 1500 PR matter if you're racing a 10,000 at NCAA's? This whole question is pointless, just look at the NCAA results you stupid idiot!!!
You are one hostile dude. I would imagine this whole post is nothing but a pipe dream for yourself which is why you are so disgruntled about it.
I agree. The Guy is one hostile dude (idiot). BroJo's should eliminate people like that from posting here.
It depends what school you go to.
If you go to CU or NAU, you could finish in the 20s.
If you go to Cal, you won't qualify.
60th-120th.
Sub 14/Sub 3:40 guys will often be over 100th at D1 NCAAS.
That guy, Emmanuel Levisse, from France (and son of former French 10,000 record holder Pierre Levisse - 27:54, from the early 80's) finished very near the medals in NCAA, and has a best 10,000 time right around 29:00 or just under - but he is a bit older than the average Freshman at age 22.
Runs for Portland.
Ghost in the Philippines.
doo doo wrote:
It depends what school you go to.
If you go to CU or NAU, you could finish in the 20s.
If you go to Cal, you won't qualify.
This. I think many posters on here underestimate the number of D1 guys that do not run the 10k on the track so they don't have a comparable time and how track times don't matter a whole lot in cross country. A lot of the cross country runners do all sorts of races on the track and don't specialize on the 10k but could run a 10k faster than 29:05 if they had to run one. If every runner in the country ran a 10k on the track that 29:05 would look slow.
I went to a smaller D1 school, we had maybe 3-4 guys who could run low 29min 10k and had 3:40-3:50 1500m times. None of them qualified for nationals out of regionals. They finished 20th - 60th at regionals and didn't earn the individual qualifier. If they were the 4 to 7 man on a fast team that could qualify, however, (Any MW team for example) I expect they would finish somewhere mid pack at nationals, maybe 100-150th.
RIP: D3 All-American Frank Csorba - who ran 13:56 in March - dead
RENATO can you talk about the preparation of Emile Cairess 2:06
Rest in Peace Adrian Lehmann - 2:11 Swiss marathoner. Dies of heart attack.
I think Letesenbet Gidey might be trying to break 14 this Saturday
Running for Bowerman Track Club used to be cool now its embarrassing